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December 3, 2023 By Anne R. Allen 28 Comments

It’s Not Your Book that’s Getting Rejected; It’s Your Query Letter

It’s Not Your Book that’s Getting Rejected; It’s Your Query Letter

Is your query letter the problem? by Anne R. Allen I’ve often wondered why some wonderful writers never get a nibble from an agent, and others get a request for a full manuscript after a handful of queries. I had an insight into the issue this week when I heard from a friend of a […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection Tagged With: advice for writers, Anne R. Allen, common new writer mistakes, how to write a query letter, The Lady of the Lakewood Diner

August 6, 2023 By Anne R. Allen 39 Comments

How Can a Writer Show Multiple Points of View Without Head-Hopping?

How Can a Writer Show Multiple Points of View Without Head-Hopping?

  By Anne R. Allen Point of view is one of the toughest things for a new writer to master when learning to write fiction. You hear terms like “omniscient, third person limited, second person, deep point of view, camera’s eye” etc. But it’s hard to figure out which one works for your story. And […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: advice for writers, Anne R. Allen, head-hopping, So Much for Buckingham, Writing tips

March 1, 2020 By Anne R. Allen 97 Comments

Clueless Advice People Give New Writers: 10 Things to Ignore

Clueless Advice People Give New Writers: 10 Things to Ignore

Clueless advice abounds. Everybody’s an expert. by Anne R. Allen I’m always amazed at the people who start giving me advice as soon as they hear I’m a writer. Even though I’ve been published for over 30 years, they’re always sure they know more than I do. And it’s worse for new writers. They’re bombarded […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection Tagged With: advice for new writers, advice for writers, Googling Old Boyfriends

September 16, 2018 By Anne R. Allen 38 Comments

10 Books to Help Writers When You’re Discouraged, Blocked, or Feel Like You’re Not a Real Writer

10 Books to Help Writers When You’re Discouraged, Blocked, or Feel Like You’re Not a Real Writer

Feeling like you’re not a real writer? Fight self-doubt with these books. by Janet Boyer What are the true enemies of writers—those monsters that haunt, harangue and harass? After twenty years of writing—the last decade spent as a traditionally-published non-fiction author and Amazon.com Hall of Fame Reviewer—I’ve chased down those #*@#$!% fiends and took names. […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection Tagged With: advice for writers, Janet Boyer, planning your writing career, Tarot, Writers block

May 27, 2018 By Anne R. Allen 33 Comments

The Writer’s Long Weekend: Fantasy and Reality.

The Writer’s Long Weekend: Fantasy and Reality.

Fantasy is what keeps writers going… by Ruth Harris Does any of this sound familiar? Fantasy: Oodles of long, uninterrupted stretches of time in which to dream, think, imagine. Reality: Rewriting/revising/editing that *%$& chapter for the umpteenth time. Fantasy: A leisurely afternoon at a baseball game, or at the park, or relaxing in a hammock. […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life Tagged With: advice for writers, Husband Training School, Ruth Harris

February 11, 2018 By Anne R. Allen 110 Comments

Top Ten Peeves of Creative Writing Teachers

Top Ten Peeves of Creative Writing Teachers

A creative writing teacher has to deal with a lot. By Melodie Campbell It all started in 1992.  I’d won a couple of crime fiction awards, and the local college came calling. Did I want to come on faculty and teach in the writing program?  Hell, yes!  (Pass the scotch.) Over the years, I continued […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, The Writing Life, uncategorized, Writing Craft Tagged With: advice for writers, creative writing teachers, Melodie Campbell, newbie advice, Writing tips

January 28, 2018 By Anne R. Allen 39 Comments

9 Powerful Secrets That Will Supercharge Your Fiction

9 Powerful Secrets That Will Supercharge Your Fiction

Secrets are the engine that keep a story moving forward. by Ruth Harris Shhh! Secrets. Everyone has them. Every book must have at least one because secrets are the jet-powered engine that propels fiction forward. Ever notice how many blurbs in the daily BookBub email include the word secret? Secrets provide motivation, plot, character, even a setting (a […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: advice for writers, Decades, Love and Money, Ruth Harris, Secrets in Fiction, Writing tips

December 10, 2017 By Anne R. Allen 52 Comments

THE TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS…WRITING CLICHÉS

THE TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS…WRITING CLICHÉS

Writing clichés are allowed at Christmastime, even welcomed!   by Tara Sparling When it comes to Christmas, writers and writing are inextricably linked. The rites and rituals of the season are handed down from year to year through books, TV, movies, and song. But where are the festive songs about writers? I searched high and low, but […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life, Writing Craft Tagged With: advice for writers, Easy Blogging for Busy Authors, Tara Sparling, writing cliches, Writing tips

October 29, 2017 By Anne R. Allen 15 Comments

How to use Authentic Historical Detail to Trigger Emotions and Memories in Your Reader

How to use Authentic Historical Detail to Trigger Emotions and Memories in Your Reader

Beyond Nostalgia: authentic historical detail from fads, trends, and headlines can help you write books readers will relate to. by Ruth Harris Writers of historical fiction, whether Regency, Middle Ages, Victorian use the markers of the era—clothes, furniture, manners, leaders, resisters, war, peace, prosperity, recession—to create character, conflict, and plot. Writers of fiction set in […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: advice for writers, enrich your fiction, Husband Training School, Ruth Harris, Writing tips

September 24, 2017 By Anne R. Allen 31 Comments

Process Goals: 6 Ways Slowing Down and Thinking Small Will Help You Write Your Book

Process Goals: 6 Ways Slowing Down and Thinking Small Will Help You Write Your Book

 Process goals make that road seem less daunting by Ruth Harris Psychologists differentiate between outcome goals (write a book) and process goals (the steps it will take to write a book). The outcome goal focuses on the big picture and the end result—a diamond-studded World Series ring, an Emmy, the winner’s circle at the Kentucky Derby. An outcome goal […]

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Filed Under: Writing Craft Tagged With: advice for writers, Love and Money, process goals, Ruth Harris, Writing tips

July 30, 2017 By Anne R. Allen 30 Comments

The Writer’s Discomfort Zone: How to Survive—and Thrive

The Writer’s Discomfort Zone: How to Survive—and Thrive

In the discomfort zone? How to get through the day. by Ruth Harris “It’s a cut-throat industry,” said English author Sean Thomas (his real name) quoted recently in the Wall Street Journal. The international bestselling author of The Ice Twins, S.K. Tremayne aka Tom Knox, (both pen names of Mr. Thomas), was not talking about violent drug cartels […]

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Filed Under: Social Media and Marketing For Writers, The Publishing Business, The Writing Life Tagged With: advice for writers, anxiety in writers, creativity, discomfort zone, Husband Training School, Ruth Harris

May 28, 2017 By Anne R. Allen 31 Comments

Why Writing Rules (Usually) Don’t Work, But Writing Guidelines Do

Why Writing Rules (Usually) Don’t Work, But Writing Guidelines Do

 Writing guidelines can help us climb that “book mountain”  by Ruth Harris A breath-taking article about a Polish team of mountaineers planning to climb K2 in the winter—a risky-to-the-max feat that has never been accomplished—reminded me that every book is K2, a mountain that has never been climbed. Like expert climbers, writers make progress step […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, The Writing Life, Writing Craft Tagged With: advice for writers, Love and Money, pantser vs. planner, Ruth Harris, writing rules, Writing tips

May 21, 2017 By Anne R. Allen 68 Comments

Practice Novels: 10 Reasons Why You Shouldn’t Publish that 1st Novel…Yet

Practice Novels: 10 Reasons Why You Shouldn’t Publish that 1st Novel…Yet

Most authors start with practice novels. Some may be publishable…later. by Anne R. Allen We often hear stories about authors who have phenomenal success with a “first novel.” I’m sure most writers fantasize about being one of those success stories as we begin our careers. I sure did. But here’s what I didn’t know when […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, The Writing Life, uncategorized, Writing Craft Tagged With: advice for writers, Eileen Goudge, Go Set a Watchman, Harper Lee, newbie advice, practice novels, pre-publication, The Lady of the Lakewood Diner, Writing tips

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writers digest 101 best websites for writers award

Anne R. AllenAnne R. Allen writes funny mysteries and how-to-books for writers. She also writes poetry and short stories on occasion. She’s a contributor to Writer’s Digest and the Novel and Short Story Writer’s Market.

Her bestselling Camilla Randall Mystery Series features perennially down-on-her-luck former socialite Camilla Randall—who is a magnet for murder, mayhem and Mr. Wrong, but always solves the mystery in her quirky, but oh-so-polite way.

Ruth Harris NYT best selling authorRuth is a million-copy New York Times bestselling author, Romantic Times award winner, former Big 5 editor, publisher, and news junkie.

Her emotional, entertaining women’s fiction and critically praised novels have sold millions of copies in hard cover, paperback and ebook editions, been translated into 19 languages, sold in 30 countries, and were prominent selections of leading book clubs including the Literary Guild and the Book Of The Month Club.

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